27 research outputs found
Proceedings of the Space Shuttle Environmental Assessment Workshop on Tropospheric Effects
Various aspects of the environmental effect of space shuttle exhaust, sonic boom, and launch noise are presented
Results of examination of the returned Surveyor 3 samples for particulate impacts.
The Meteoroid Sciences Branch at the Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC) examined the Surveyor 3 television camera housing and the length of polished aluminum tube retrieved by the Apollo 12 crew.B. G. Cour-Palais, R. E. Flaherty, R. W. High, D. J. Kessler, D.S. McKay, and H. A. Zoo
Jet-induced cratering of a granular surface with application to lunar spaceports
The erosion of lunar soil by rocket exhaust plumes is investigated
experimentally. This has identified the diffusion-driven flow in the bulk of
the sand as an important but previously unrecognized mechanism for erosion
dynamics. It has also shown that slow regime cratering is governed by the
recirculation of sand in the widening geometry of the crater. Scaling
relationships and erosion mechanisms have been characterized in detail for the
slow regime. The diffusion-driven flow occurs in both slow and fast regime
cratering. Because diffusion-driven flow had been omitted from the lunar
erosion theory and from the pressure cratering theory of the Apollo and Viking
era, those theories cannot be entirely correct.Comment: 13 pages, link to published version:
http://cedb.asce.org/cgi/WWWdisplay.cgi?090000